Water (DP IB Biology: HL): Exam Questions

2 hours21 questions
11 mark

Water has the ability to act as a solvent and dissolve many ionic and covalent compounds.

Which of the following 3-carbon compounds will not dissolve in water?

  • Propanoic acid

    q3-easy--option-a-2-1-metabolism--water-ib-dp-biology-sl
  • Propanol

    q3-easy-option-b-2-1-metabolism--water-ib-dp-biology-sl
  • Glycerol

    q3-easy-option-c-2-1-metabolism--water-ib-dp-biology-sl
  • Propane

    q3-easy-option-d-2-1-metabolism--water-ib-dp-biology-sl
21 mark

The specific heat capacity of water is the highest of all liquids. Which of the following would be a correct definition of specific heat capacity? 

  • The heat required to change one mole of liquid into one mole of gas. 

  • The heat required to raise the temperature of 1kg of liquid by 1°C. 

  • The heat required to change one mole of solid into one mole of liquid.

  • The ability of a solid to transfer heat to a liquid. 

31 mark

Which of the following diagrams correctly shows the bonding between two water molecules?

  • hydrogen-bonding-in-water-a
  • hydrogen-bonding-in-water-b
  • hydrogen-bonding-in-water-c
  • hydrogen-bonding-in-water-d
11 mark

Which of the following are not examples of hydrogen bonding?

  • Base-pairing between two strands of DNA.

  • The forces that hold water molecules together.

  • The bond that joins one nucleotide to its neighbour in a strand of DNA.

  • Interactions between water and the polar R groups of certain amino acids. 

21 mark

Water (H2O) is a polar molecule, whereas methane (CH4) is nonpolar. Which of the properties of methane is explained by methane's lack of polarity?

  • Low molecular weight. 

  • Low boiling point. 

  • Flammability.

  • Greenhouse gas effect. 

31 mark

Which of the following observations is not explained by water's high latent heat of vaporisation and specific heat capacity?

  • Ice is less dense than liquid water, so it floats on water. 

  • Water exists in all three physical states (solid, liquid and gas) on Earth. 

  • A small volume of water can dissipate a lot of heat from an organism. 

  • A lot of heat energy is required to raise the temperature of water. 

41 mark

Which row of the table lists the four common metabolites in decreasing order of solubility in water?

  • oxygen → sodium chloride → cholesterol → hydrophobic amino acid

  • sodium chloride → oxygen→ hydrophobic amino acid  → cholesterol

  • hydrophobic amino acid → oxygen → sodium chloride → cholesterol

  • sodium chloride → hydrophobic amino acid → oxygen → cholesterol

51 mark

Which of the following properties of water are a result of intermolecular forces?

  1. High surface tension.

  2. Good solvent.

  3. Cohesiveness.

  4. High specific heat capacity.

  • I and II

  • I, II and III

  • I, II and IV

  • All

61 mark

Which of the following properties of water stops enzymes from being denatured during transpiration?

I. Water retains a lot of heat.

II. Water forms hydrogen bonds with other polar and nonpolar molecules.

III. A lot of heat is required to evaporate water.

IV. Water is cohesive.

  • I only

  • I and II

  • II, III and IV

  • III only

11 mark

Sodium hydrogencarbonate (NaHCO₃) dissociates into sodium ions (Na⁺) and bicarbonate ions (HCO₃⁻) when dissolved in water. The bicarbonate ions create an alkaline environment suitable for certain enzymes, and in the blood they help buffer lactic acid during exercise.

How does water help the production of bicarbonate ions? 

  • The oxygen atoms form ionic bonds with bicarbonate ions. 

  • The oxygen atoms in water attract bicarbonate ions.

  • The hydrogen atoms form hydrogen bonds with bicarbonate ions. 

  • The hydrogen atoms in water attract bicarbonate ions. 

21 mark

Which of the following does not rely on the specific heat capacity of water?

  • Heat loss through evaporation of sweat

  • Enzyme function

  • Aquatic ecosystems withstanding extreme temperature change

  • Humans living in sub-zero temperatures